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Futuretrack survey

Futuretrack is open to anyone who applied to enter full-time higher education through UCAS in 2005/06. If this is you, and you have not yet participated in the survey, don’t be left out – do it NOW!

Click here to complete the survey .

You could be in with a chance to win a cash prize: there are ten of £1,000 or one hundred of £100 prizes to be won!

If you have problems opening the link, copy and paste the following link into your browser: https://www.snapsurveys.com/futuretrack?u=wier.

If you were a 2005/06 UCAS applicant, you are part of the study, whether you started a course in Autumn 2006, deferred and re-applied, had a gap year, completed a course, dropped out or did something different instead.

Don't miss your chance to make your views count and contribute to a deeper understanding of the labour market!

Have a look at our FAQs for more information, and see the Institute for Employment Research's privacy statement for more details about how your data will be used.

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Wed 30 Nov 2011, 11:26 | Tags: Futuretrack, Graduate Labour Market, Media, Graduate, Survey, HECSU, Prize

Futuretrack Stage 4 Survey has just gone live

Did you apply for a full-time undergraduate course in 2005/06? If so, you are a member of the FUTURETRACK cohort. If you have already participated in this important independent survey conducted by a research team at Warwick University on behalf of the Higher Education Careers Services Unit (HECSU), you’ll know that it is investigating students’ progress through higher education and their experiences in the graduate labour market.

The Stage 4 questionnaire is now available, and existing participants have been sent an email inviting them to fill it in, so if this means YOU, check all your email accounts! All eligible respondents who complete the survey have the chance of winning cash prizes: ten of £1,000 or one hundred of £100. If you haven’t received it, or you are a 2005/06 applicant who would like to join the survey now, you can register here.

Please pass on the message to all your classmates with whom you are in contact, so that we can develop as full a picture as possible about the experiences of this ‘recession generation’ to inform policy and practice in higher education. You can find out more about Futuretrack here: http://go.warwick.ac.uk/futuretrack.

You can also follow us on Twitter and on Facebook.

Fri 04 Nov 2011, 10:52 | Tags: Futuretrack, Graduate Labour Market, Graduate, Survey

Students’ Skills Development and Perceptions paper now available online

The working paper on Skills Development and Perceptions from the Futuretrack project is now up online! This paper looks at final year undergraduate students’ perceptions of the skills they have to offer and the skills they think are sought by employers.

In particular, the issues discussed are:

• Students’ beliefs about the extent to which they personally possessed key skills

• Students’ perceptions of skills developed on courses

• The main skills students considered employers seek in graduate recruits

• The extent to which students believed they had the skills and qualities that graduate employers seek

Key findings include:

• The majority of final year students rated their skills as at least adequate in all areas and most were confident of their skills and knowledge.

• Between 80 and 90 per cent of students reported that their research skills, specialist knowledge, critical analysis, and ability to apply knowledge had been developed ‘very much’ or ‘quite a lot’ as part of their course.

• Almost three quarters of final year students thought that the experience of being a student had made them more employable than they would otherwise have been, and more than 80 per cent agreed to a greater or lesser extent that the experience of being a student had enhanced their social and intellectual capabilities more broadly.

• As they approached the end of their undergraduate courses, over 80 per cent of respondents believed that they have the skills employers are likely to be looking for when recruiting for the kind of jobs they wanted to apply for.

Read the full paper here: http://go.warwick.ac.uk/futuretrack/findings/ft3.1_wp4_skills.pdf

Fri 28 Oct 2011, 16:16 | Tags: Futuretrack, Findings, Graduate, Survey

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